Pope Francis seems to describe his life in the Vatican almost as if he were in prison — at least as far as his freedom of movement goes. But that is not the first thing he cites when he talks about what he and prisoners have in common.

When visiting a prison, he said, “I think to myself, ‘I, too, could be here.’ That is, none of us can be sure that we would never commit a crime, something for which we’d be put in prison.”

Pope Francis’ comment to a reporter from a newspaper in Argentina in mid-May was just the most recent time he has spoken about how everyone makes mistakes, everyone sins, and if one’s personal history and circumstances were different, he or she could be that convict.

“They haven’t had the opportunities that I have had of not doing something stupid and ending up in prison,” he told the newspaper, La Voz del Pueblo. “This makes me cry inside. It is deeply moving.”

Continuing a practice he began as archbishop of Buenos Aires, the pope has spent plenty of time behind bars: He celebrated Holy Thursday Mass in a juvenile detention facility in 2013 and at Rome’s Rebibbia prison in 2015; he visited the Poggioreale prison outside Naples in March; and in the summer of 2014, visited inmates during trips to both Calabria and Isernia.

Connecting with inmates

Even as pope, he continues to make a phone call every other Saturday to young inmates he used to visit regularly in a Buenos Aires prison. He spent time May 30 with hundreds of children of Italian inmates, including some children who had lived in jail with their mothers. Italian law encourages house arrest for convicted mothers of small children or confinement with their children in supervised group homes. However, when that is not feasible, the law allows children to live with their mothers in prison until the age of 6.

When he goes to northern Italy in late June to venerate the Shroud of Turin, he is scheduled to have Sunday lunch with a group of juvenile offenders from the Ferrante Aporti facility. And, during his July trip to South America, he is scheduled to visit the maximum-security Palmasola prison in Santa Cruz, Bolivia.

Pope Francis’ talks to prisoners always focus on the wideness of God’s mercy. His talks about prisons always focus on the need to ensure incarceration is designed not only as punishment, but as a process of education and socialization preparing a person to return to society and function as a law-abiding citizen.

In a wide variety of settings, Pope Francis cites the 25th chapter of Matthew and its judgment day list: Did you feed the hungry, clothe the naked and visit prisoners?

During a general audience talk in 2014, when he was explaining how the church is “a mother who teaches us the works of mercy,” the pope said he knew many people feel uncomfortable with the very idea of visiting someone in prison. They think, “It’s dangerous! They are bad people,” he said.

“Listen up,” he told thousands of people gathered in St. Peter’s Square for the audience. “Each one of us is capable of doing the same thing done by that man or woman in jail. All of us are capable of sinning and making the same mistake in life. They are not worse than you and I!”

He added: “Mercy overcomes every wall, every obstacle” and can instill new life and hope in others. While it may be easy to recognize a prisoner’s need for mercy and conversion, Pope Francis assures the inmates he visits that asking for God’s mercy and the strength to convert is the lifelong task of every Christian.